yes. Four poles are created like two normal magnets.
if we further divide the 2 new magnets, we get 4 new magnets each with its own north pole and south pole.
No.If you break the magnet, it is still a useful magnet.
No, magnets do not have the ability to break glass. Glass is not a magnetic material, so the force of a magnet is not strong enough to break it.
Yes, you actually do get two smaller magnets, and each has a north and south pole.
That depends on the strength of the magnet and thickness of the glass.A regular magnet may work through a thin piece of glass, however a weak magnet will not work through a thick piece of glass.
it becomes to peices
You get a bunch of smaller magnets and you will still have north pole.
You get two smaller magnets. Each piece will still have its own north and south poles, making them individual magnets.
Natural magnets, like lodestone, are rocks that possess magnetic properties. These magnets occur naturally in the Earth and have a magnetic field. Artificial magnets are man-made magnets created from materials like iron, nickel, and cobalt by aligning their magnetic domains. These types of magnets are used in various everyday applications, such as in electric motors and refrigerators.
It shouldn't because the magnetron, the device that makes the microwaves have very strong magnets in them already.
A bar magnet has two poles, a north and a south. When you break a bar magnet into to pieces, you create two bar magnets, each with a north and a south pole. So the total number of poles will then be four.
If you break a magnet in half, each half gains a new pole. For example, you are holding a magnet in both hands with the north magnetic pole in your left hand and the south magnetic pole in your right hand. You break the magnet in half. The half that is in your left hand gains a new south magnetic pole and the half that is in your right hand gains a new north magnetic pole.
You can made it in many shapes but if you break it so you can not reshape it.